study on innovationculture: we can be efficient, true, but not innovative
TRANSCRIPT
THE INNOVATION
CULTURE OF CORPORATE
GROUPS
“We can be efficient, true,
but not innovative”
Thomas Sattelberger,
Former Chief HR Officer at Deutsche Telekom
on the innovation capability of German corporate groups
In cooperation with
Technical University of Munich
(1) Himmelreich (2015): “Digitalisierung beschleunigt das Innovationstempo”, Link; (2) Perry (2014): “Fortune 500 firms in 1955 vs. 2014; 88% are gone, and we’re all better off because of that dynamic ‘crea tive destruction’”, Link; (3) Möller (2015):
“Warum Roboter bessere Jobs schaffen”, Link; (4) Bakashi et al. (2015): “Creativity vs. Robots”, Link; (5) Presseportal (2015): “Industrie-Roboter erobern die Welt”, Link; (6) Sommer (2015): “Zukunft ohne Arbeitsplätze”, Link; (7) Gillmann (2016):
“Digitale Wüste in deutschen Amtsstuben”, Link; (8) Kaiser (2015): “Maschinen könnten 18 Millionen Arbeitnehmer verdrängen”, Link; (9) Fleig (2015): “Disruptive Innovationen: Die Regeln der Branche radikal verändern”, Link; (10) Cribb (2016): “Was
den digitalen CEO vom analogen CEO unterscheidet”, Link; (11) Lamprecht (2016): “Digitalisierung: Innovation und Strategien”, Link; (12) Deutsche Telekom (2015): “Arbeit 4.0”, Link; (13) GPM (2015): “Vermessung der Projekttätigkeit”, Link;
(ALL) last accessed: 14 March 2016.
Numerous industries threatened1
Creative destruction from disruptive
innovations endangers current market
leaders.2
Permanent employee numbers decline
“Contracting instead of hiring”12 – project
work will make up more than 40% in five
years.13
Creative intelligence will survive
Robots take over routine work3 – 80% of
“creative jobs” are secure from
technologization.4
Germany underdeveloped digitally
Market cap of digital US companies is 34
times greater than Germany’s Internet
economy.7
Startups destroy market structures9
Rigid structures of large corporate groups
make them too sluggish to place
innovations on market in good time.9, 10
Efficiency mindset a threat to survival
Digital transformation demands radical
rethinking of all business models.10
Big data rule the game
Companies’ core activities are
increasingly data-based and IT-
supported.11
Machines replacing people
15% annual growth in industrial robots5
and cost savings of up to 90%.6
50% of jobs at jeopardy
Increasing technologization jeopardizing
numerous jobs in Germany.8
Impact of Digital Transformation
Agility
Creativity
New
Growth through incremental
optimizations
Productivity
Tried-and-tested
Corporate groups traditionally focus strongly on efficiency
and productivity. This limited focus will not secure the future
potential of these companies because the growing
competition from Silicon Valley is taking over entire
business fields.
Innovation culture must be encouraged to ensure
sustainably successful survival on the market!
10 new startups
with a combined valuation of over
US$1bn in January and February 201614
88% of the Fortune 500 from the year 1955 no longer
exist today15
Corporate Culture – Green vs. Blue
Viable corporate culture comprises genuine values and fundamental convictions that influence the actions performed by employees.
Certain features such as prescribed decision-making processes or the creative design of office space often embody these fundamental
convictions in a form visible to the outside world. A number of cultures may well co-exist in corporations – but a genuine innovation
culture is rarely given adequate consideration.
Innovation Culture
Efficiency Culture
Risk
(14) CBInsights (2016): “The Unicorn List: Current Private Companies Valued At $1B And Above”, Link; (15) Perry (2014): “Fortune 500 firms in 1955 vs. 2014; 88% are gone, and we’re all better off because of that dynamic ‘creative
destruction’”, Link; (ALL) last accessed: 15 March 2016.
60 survey respondents
11 interviews with
experts
5 workshops
1 result:
“Efficiency eats innovation culture for breakfast.”
Snapshot
Workshops
Objective: Investigation of the advantages
and disadvantages of specific organizational
structures and derivation of best practices.
Among the experts:
Objective: Investigation of the special
cultural traits of corporate groups and the
impact of these traits on innovation capability,
focusing in particular on:
The five levels of the analysis of results
Hans EhmHead of Supply Chain Innovation at Infineon
Daniel MarkwigDirector of SAP AppHaus
Jens BodeSenior Innovation and Foresight Manager at
Henkel
Frank RehmeDirector gmvteam GmbH,
previously Head of Innovation at METRO
Dr. Heinrich ArnoldGlobal Head of Telekom Innovation Laboratories
Thomas EdigChief HR Officer
Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles
Interviews with ExpertsOnline Survey
Objective: Identification of measures and
best practices within the corporate group
environment that encourage innovativeness
(based on Schein, 2010).
Target Group
Innovation experts
from corporate groups
(n=60)
Symbol indicates a quantitative result of this study in the following
16%
12%
23%
7%7%
9%
26%
Study Design
Innovation strategy
OrganizationInnovation
processes
Leadership Innovation team
Innovation Strategy
Innovation Processes
Innovation Team
Leadership
Organization
Structural elements Personnel elements
Areas of an Innovation Culture Critical for Success
Starting point of a strategic
orientation for innovation processes
Structures and networks that allow
innovationsProcesses and idea management
Leadership by example, incentives
and breathing spaceThe team as the key building block of
innovation management
Ambidexterity is the combination of explore and exploit strategies – it enables managers to act in the
future and the present in equal measure (Deutsche Telekom, Shareground Study “Work 4.0”, 2015). Corporate
groups are expected to focus on exploit strategies. Often, however, this practice clouds the view for the
exploration of disruptive innovations that are required for the ability to survive long-term.
Explore strategies should ideally be realized only in separate units and away from traditional corporate group
organization and traditional processes. But the “what” and the “how” are not the only decisive elements; they
are joined by the question of “Who are the suitable people for exploration, and how do I find and encourage
them?”
...of the experts from the qualitative analysis
regard a more ambidextrous innovation strategy
to be an important management task and
critical for the success of the innovation
capability.
100%
Frank Rehme – Director gmvteam GmbH, previously
Head of Innovation at METRO:
“Large corporations have simply been designed for
conformity – this is where their strength lies.”
A more ambidextrous innovation strategy is essential
for long-term survival on the market. Traditional corporate group structures have been fashioned to produce incremental innovations and support exploit strategies.
Disruptive innovations, on the other hand, are based on explore strategies that are not encouraged by corporate group structures.
Claus Peter Schründer – Senior Vice President Deutsche Telekom Services Europe
“Constantly rethinking processes and ideas and being innovative are vital elements for maintaining
competitiveness, especially for shared service centers. In practice, this means reconciling two cultures
(efficiency and innovation) under a single roof – a mammoth task.”
1 Think Tank, 7 Managers
Jens Bode – Senior Innovation and Foresight Manager at Henkel, speaking about the challenge of idea transfer:
“Despite the flood of new ideas, we nevertheless determined that their transfer to our operating business was
anything but simple. The learning curve was integrated into downstream innovation processes.”
The integration of disruptive ideas is the greatest challenge for German corporate groups. Although there is
still no definitive concept for the success of structural integration, two approaches have emerged:
For one, a well-considered interface design can assure the integration of disruptive ideas in the various
departments of a corporate group. This requires the drawing of clear lines of responsibility to ensure the
trouble-free implementation of this process. Second, there should be a careful weighing of whether a
disruptive innovation must necessarily be integrated into the corporate group or whether an end-to-end
realization of the idea in a small, decentralized innovation unit is not more promising.
Disruptive ideas should be developed in independent
and agile units that have startup character.Corporate groups have in the past come up short when it came to linking agile units with the operating core business and the processes
in the parent group. Well-planned interface management, however, is decisive if ideas are to be developed successfully to market
maturity.
The definition of interfaces has proved to be an important best practice for ensuring interaction between the
corporate group and agile units. Moreover, internally connected networkers who simultaneously maintain
orientation to the outside are the best choices for filling interface positions.
You need people with a visionary outlook, excellent process understanding of the market and operating
business/processes and a resilient network both within and outside of the corporate group. Their task is to
convey ideas from innovation departments to the business units and to network the doers in the different
areas with the objective of promoting their integration and evolvement. Regular workshops with specific
themes between departments that are open to all employees create an additional network of more informal
character.
Organizational Innovation Killers
“[...] include the lack of an inspiring and motivating environment, missing or overly technocratic
processes, undefined interfaces, no clear definitions and a lack of innovation vision, poor
communication, no consideration of individual and creative mindsets, a lack of balance between
breathing space and structure, and a lack of interaction both internally and externally [...].”
Jens Bode – Senior Innovation and Foresight Manager at Henkel
A more ambidextrous organizational structure requires
defined interfaces and extensively networked facilitators. Interfaces that are too rigid or the lack of any interfaces in the organizational structure of various innovation units as well as the
inadequate personnel staffing of interface functions hinder the successful linking of agile units to the corporate group and inhibit the
successful integration of disruptive ideas.
Ideas must be close to the decision-maker, so that they can be assessed quickly and unbureaucratically
and resources (budget, time, and skills) for their realization can be mobilized. Best practices show that this
heightens the ability to persevere and the probability of realization. When the innovation department reports
directly to the management board, spontaneous budget approvals without constantly closing ranks with
individual business units becomes possible. Lucrative innovations can be driven forward more efficiently and
placed on the market.
Only half of the respondents...see themselves in a position to present ideas openly to
people at various levels of the hierarchy.
Best Practice: The financing of an idea should be approved
within a maximum of two higher hierarchy levels
UQBATE is an internal innovation program at Deutsche Telekom for the
targeted encouragement of intrapreneurs. The unit generates
high iteration speed because top management provides the breathing space
in which teams can and must act autonomously. Allowing teams to make
decisions on their own responsibility without individual management
approvals presumes a fundamental trust in the team and leaves
management free to concentrate on core business. Moreover, innovative
employees can be found everywhere.
Flat hierarchies and unbureaucratic budget release
processes foster product placement in good time. Hierarchical structures, complex coordination channels, long cycles for making decisions, and the focus on learned KPIs and processes
from core business are unsuitable for the placement of new, innovative products on the market. Moreover, the demand for “100% error-
free” and short-term profitability prevent fast time-to-market of new products.
How exactly does do it ?
74%...of the respondents would not say that
their innovation processes encourage fast
realization of ideas.
88%...would say that flexibility in the
innovation process is vital for the
development of new ideas.
80%...have a positive attitude to a change in
existing processes.
Disruptive ideas are not born in traditional processes! The Stage Gate process is eminently suitable for
the selection of large numbers of ideas and for making a decision about which project will be given
budgetary resources. But the pursuit of an explore strategy requires other methods and processes that
permit iterative product development. Digital platforms foster interaction with external parties, thus
supporting the co-creative innovation process.
Iterative “self-learning” processes and long-term
sponsoring are decisive for disruptive innovations. The classic, sequential Stage Gate process analogous to traditional idea management is suitable primarily for incremental process
innovations in a familiar environment. When it comes to disruptive innovations in an unknown environment, on the other hand, agile
methods that promote iterative product development (“Build – Measure – Learn”) are recommended. In either case, fast realization of
ideas requires a sponsor on the management board.
SAP’s AppHaus provides a creative space in which design and co-
innovation projects are carried out in close collaboration with customers.
Process, People, and Space!
These are the three most important criteria for successful innovating. By
consistently applying the Design Thinking method and exploiting
specialized design skills, new ideas can be developed quickly, and
integration of end users assures the fast validation and iteration of the
results.
How exactly does do it ?
I am convinced that open innovation with experts from the
innovation hotspots in Israel, the USA and Germany,
partner companies, and universities is the foundation that
will enable us to realize innovations quickly.
Dr. Heinrich Arnold –
Global Head of Telekom Innovation Laboratories
82%...of the experts confirm that
collaboration with customers and partners is
fundamental for driving market-oriented
innovation projects forward.
Careful consideration of the organizational structure can lay the groundwork for the specific interaction
among colleagues from various innovation departments. DHL develops new ideas in innovation workshops
with customers; in other corporate groups, experts are invited to give weekly talks, or groups establish their
own “associated institutes” for cooperation with universities and research institutes (e.g.: the cooperation of
Deutsche Telekom with the TU Berlin). Some corporate groups have established the “rotating CEO”
principle: individual management board members take charge of the coaching of an important innovation
project, but are replaced in the position by a different management board member after nine months.
An end-to-end integration of external partners in projects
ensures objectivity, market focus, and new ideas.Corporate groups often develop innovations on the basis of existing approaches that have become established in the immediate
environment. This “tunnel vision” ignores disruptive innovations or the addressing of future market needs. Collaboration with external
partners ensures “thinking outside the box” – encouraging impact-oriented innovation.
The Success Factor Sharing Culture
“Ideas always come from ‘problems’,
inspiration, and interaction with other people –
both internally and externally.”
Jens Bode – Senior Innovation and Foresight
Manager at Henkel
...of the surveyed companies have at their disposal digital tools
and platforms that are intended to encourage the sharing of
knowledge and cross-functional collaboration.
...believe that these platforms are used effectively and
frequently by managers and employees.
74%
Only 39%
Corporate groups have recognized the potential of digital platforms and tools, but only a minority of the
employees are making effective use of them. Determined enablement of the workforce specific to target
groups – e.g., through (reverse) monitoring, (digital) learning formats, and workshops for the communication of
disruptive methods – is consequently essential for demonstrating to executives and employees what added
value digital tools can contribute to the encouragement of virtual, cross-departmental cooperation. A digitally
operating organization is therefore a major success factor for the encouragement of an innovation culture.
Successful cross-departmental collaboration presupposes
enablement throughout the entire organization.The units within a corporate group operate in accordance with the division of labor principle and are therefore isolated from one another
– and this is no less true for innovation projects. The result is redundant work and the squandering of resources, leading to losses of
knowledge and synergies. Corporate groups have recognized the added value of digital tools with respect to interaction and the
evolvement of ideas. A lack of enablement in the workforce, however, leads to inadequate use of platforms for these purposes.
“Industrial companies listed on stock exchanges are generally strongly driven by
KPIs. When you have responsibility for the business, there is no culture of reward
for taking risks.”
Senior manager of a German technology company
...of the managers consciously accept risks
when realizing ideas.
Only 59%
A willingness to take risks is especially necessary for disruptive innovating. The governance of corporate
groups must take into account that the effects of disruptive innovations generally do not become visible for a
number of years and that “making mistakes” in development makes good sense because existing processes
can be steadily improved. Risk management for innovations can provide justification for investments in
innovation projects ahead of other departments. CVCs16 have already realized this within corporate groups –
just one successful investment can and should amortize all other investments.
An appropriate target system is critically decisive for the
willingness of executives to take risks.As a rule, corporate group managers are trimmed to achieve efficiency and short-time, supposedly plannable successes. This leads to a
lack of willingness to take risks and “silo thinking” of the executives. New ideas are perceived as distractions or even threats –
“questioners of the status quo = planning basis for the future” – and innovations are blocked.
“It is a paradox, but trying out a lot of new ideas reduces the risk of bad decisions.
This presupposes, however, rigorous customer-centric thinking and, at the same time, that ideas and
project teams are validated before investments or scaling take place.
The market, not ‘the boss’, is the primary target group!”
Johannes Nünning – Director UQBATE Deutsche Telekom
(16) Corporate venture capital (CVC) units work according to a portfolio approach to justify the investment risk in a young startup. There is a fundamental assumption here: Just one successful investment is enough to amortize
all of the other investments in startups. All that is needed is for 1 out of 20 startups to be successful.
...of the respondents say that
their proposals for improvements or the development of
new innovations are not accepted with gratitude.
Almost 1/4
...of employees consider their
present incentive systems to be truly effective in
encouraging the participation in innovation projects.
Corporate groups have a huge backlog in establishing effective incentive systems.
Yet they are indispensable if the full creativity potential of executives and employees is to be mined. In the
opinion of the experts, the provision of budgetary resources, freedom, appropriate appreciation, and
trust in employees and the mirroring of these factors in the target system are among the most important
elements.
In this respect, the teams’ freedom to make decisions and utilize resources is decisive for the success of the
realization of innovation projects.
Only 30%
“An incentive system really functions best when people are given the
freedom to develop their ideas.”
Senior manager of a German technology company
Trust, breathing space, and appreciation enhance
creativity potential and innovation capability.The creative potential of employees is not fully exploited in corporate groups because of the wrong incentives – focusing on efficiency,
short-term successes, and quantitative measurement parameters – and/or a lack of appreciation (lack of acceptance of new ideas, no
access to decision-makers).
“Many innovators are simply not taken seriously; this is
often because they are in the wrong organizational location.
They are frequently given enough budgetary resources to
keep them quiet so that they do not disrupt the usual course
of business.”
Frank Rehme – Director gmvteam GmbH
...would agree that their bosses
generally urge them to assume responsibility in innovation
projects.
...would tell their employees in
every case about the mistakes that had been made so that
they did not occur again in the future.
Only 53%
Set an example! Encourage! Support! Boards and decision-makers must create the systematic frameworks
and assume a role model function in harmony with vision and corporate strategy. It is important in this
context to give employees the freedom to “try out” new things and to question the current situation.
Managers must allow mistakes in the innovation business so that learnings can be derived from them.
Mistakes in the core business, however, are more expensive than in a project that is still in its early phase – so
the aim here is to avoid mistakes. “Living with” this paradox is a critical factor for the success of an innovation
culture.
Only 11%
“Every manager has the assignment to practice innovation management in his or her
own purview.”
Thomas Edig, Chief HR Officer Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles
Executives must set an example of a positive culture
of mistakes and encourage employees to dare new things. The right balance between “permitting mistakes” for innovations and “avoiding mistakes” in the core business is a serious challenge for
top management. The leadership culture of corporate groups and its focus on efficiency inhibit motivated free thinkers from initiating
innovations and driving them forward long-term – this paralyzes the willingness to act and the commitment of employees for new ideas.
“Our teams are highly heterogeneous, that is what is so great. But every single individual must have at least one
extraordinary characteristic that goes far beyond the standard level (...). The core element is found in the personality
of every single individual.”
Dr. Heinrich Arnold, Global Head of Telekom Innovation Laboratories
Best practices show that the same criteria always apply for the ideal composition of innovation teams. What
is needed is a small, highly heterogeneous team with no more than five members that has a passionate
team leader. This is already being realized in many companies.
Systematic skills management ensures selective (global) screening and flexible onboarding and
offboarding of experts. The study results reveal that the more heterogeneous the innovation team, the more
successful the course of the innovation process.
Systematic skills management is the cornerstone for the
formation of suitable innovation teams.The complexity of corporate group structures prevents the (voluntary) formation of interdisciplinary teams that are suitable and have the
necessary enthusiasm for the development of the particular idea. The know-how pool (systematic skills management) of a corporate
group is not systematically utilized because of a lack of transparency, structures, and platforms. Instead, innovation teams tend to be
staffed top-down or from units “in charge of” innovation, and both diversity and ideal fit of skills are neglected.
“The people doing the work are more important to us than the idea because what counts is
he who wants to do it.”
Johannes Nünning – Director UQBATE Deutsche Telekom AG
“You will not find anyone with more
passion than the one who had the
idea.”
Frank Rehme – Director gmvteam GmbH, previously Head of Innovation at
METRO
An end-to-end accompaniment of innovation projects by idea contributors can have a positive influence on the
team’s stamina. The demands made on the corporate groups are that the idea contributor and the core team must be
able to devote 100% of their efforts to the idea, that a flexible incentive system exists, and that there will be an
opportunity to return to the line position. One latent problem frequently encountered here, however, is that the
managers in the line positions see the release of their employees in part as an imminent loss of power and respond
by blocking the release. This roadblock can be lifted by offering appropriate incentivization. All in all, internal projects
have one clear advantage: the marginal costs, especially during the early phase of the project, are virtually zero
because the personnel expenses, the major block of costs, are covered by the existing employment contracts.
Special leave and incentivization of the idea contributor
ensures end-to-end responsibility for innovations.Corporate groups do not have the necessary framework conditions that would enable them to foster innovation projects alongside the
line organization. The criteria and the procedures from the core business are applied – as a knee-jerk reaction and often subconsciously
– to innovation initiatives. Line managers frequently lack the incentive to grant indefinite leave to idea contributors for an innovation
project because they fear the loss of know-how on the line. Clear leadership “from higher up” and “for the company” rather than “for the
department” is required.
The success story of real-Drive, realized by METRO
Idea contributor as end-to-end project manager
Small, interdisciplinary decision-maker team without
hierarchies
Separately operating unit parallel to the regular organization
Pragmatic rather than complicated approach
From conception to realization: 4 months
How exactly does do it?
Organization
• Staffing of interface positions
• Decision-makers with close relationship
to the idea
• Unbureaucratic budget approvals
Innovation Strategy
• Exploit and explore strategies
• Linking of agile units
• Carefully considered interface design
Innovation Team• Systematic skills management
• “Who” more important than “What” and
“How”
• Small, heterogeneous teams
• Idea contributor as end-to-end project
manager
Innovation Processes
• Iterative “self-learning” processes
• Systematic integration of externals
• Cross-unit cooperation through digital
collaboration
Wrap Up
Leadership• Target system that allows risk-taking
• Effective incentive systems
• Empowerment and breathing space for
employees
• Live with paradox between “avoid
mistakes” and “permit mistakes”
Conclusions for Management
Digital transformation challenges corporate groups to rethink fundamentally their corporate cultures that are
characterized primarily by efficiency. A future-oriented strategy must include elements that promote
innovations and make them a topic of concern for management boards. 1.Ambidexterity is the “basic ingredient” for a corporate culture that is capable of survival.
This means living two different cultures (efficiency and innovation) in one organization and being either efficient
or innovative as appropriate to the specific situation.2.
The incentive system for managers must give consideration to innovations as well as to KPIs that measure
efficiency so that the willingness on the part of top management to take risks that is essential for an innovation
culture is enhanced.4.Control and power are truly innovation killers. The understanding of leadership for tomorrow includes setting
an example of company spirit, breathing space, and empowerment as well as the courage to accept creativity
and new ideas. 5.
3.The acceptance of the paradox between “avoiding mistakes” in core business and “appreciating mistakes” in
the early-phase development of new products and business models is one of the most important management
tasks of the future.
Top management must provide intrinsically motivated innovators with the necessary freedom and budgetary
resources that will enable them to drive their projects forward actively and on their own responsibility. The
passion necessary to foster a project end-to-end is generally found in the idea contributor. 6.
Tina Riester
Consultant
Transformation and People Management
+49 151 18565563
Marc Wagner
Partner
Global Lead Transformation, Organizations,
People Management and Integral Business
+49 175 2206049
We look forward to talking to
you about it!
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